Routine surveillance of infection in England and Wales detected 394 cases of campylobacter bacteraemia in 11 years. This represented an average incidence of 1.5 per 1000 intestinal campylobacter infections, with a range of 0.3/1000 in children aged 1-4 years to 5.9/1000 in patients aged 65 years or more. Definitive identification of 257 isolates showed that 89% were Campylobacter jejuni or C. coli; other species were C. fetus (8.6%), C. lari (0.8%), C. upsaliensis (0.8%), Helicobacter (Campylobacter) fennelliae (0.8%), and Helicobacter (Campylobacter) cinaedi (0.4%). Most (71%) of the C. jejuni/C. coli bacteraemias were in patients with acute enteritis. Of the patients with C. fetus bacteraemia only 27% had diarrhoea; they were older than patients with C. jejuni or C. coli bacteraemia (54.1 v. 45.9 years) and proportionally more of them were male (M:F ratio 2.7:1 v. 1.9:1); 41% had endovascular pathology or cellulitis. There was a higher proportion of C. jejuni serogroup O 4 (Penner) and O 18 strains among blood than faecal isolates, which suggests that they were unusually serum resistant and/or invasive.